Generic small business plan templates do not work for bars. The cost structures are different. The revenue drivers are different. The funding audiences are different. The regulatory context is different. A template built for retail or services applied to a bar produces a plan that fails hospitality-specific scrutiny.
This page covers what a bar-specific business plan template should include. Use it to evaluate templates you are considering, or as a gap analysis against a template you already have.
A complete bar business plan template includes ten sections. Each section serves specific readers with specific information needs.
One-page synthesis of the entire plan. Concept, market opportunity, financial highlights, funding request, management team. Read first by lenders and investors. If it does not convince, the rest is not read.
Legal entity, ownership structure, mission, location summary, key success factors. The context layer.
Industry overview, trade area demographics, competitive landscape, target customer profile. Must be specific and local, not generic and industry-wide.
Beverage program, food program if applicable, service standards, pricing strategy, cost of goods assumptions by beverage category.
Opening marketing plan, ongoing marketing plan, customer acquisition and retention, sales forecasting methodology.
Location, facility, equipment, staffing plan, supplier relationships, licensing framework, technology stack, operational controls.
Ownership, management roles, key personnel backgrounds, advisory relationships, hiring plan. Disproportionate influence on lender confidence.
Pre-opening costs, startup capital, monthly year-one revenue projections, three-year annual projections, break-even, cash flow, ROI, sensitivity analysis.
Amount, structure, use of funds by category, terms expected, repayment plan or exit strategy.
Supporting documentation – sample menus, floor plans, equipment quotes, lease terms, resumes, market research.
Generic templates miss hospitality-specific considerations:
A template that covers these considerations produces a plan that reads as hospitality-literate. A template that does not produces a plan that reads as generic.
Free bar business plan templates found online fall into three categories:
Free templates from SaaS companies (POS systems, payment processors, restaurant tech). Purpose is email capture for marketing. Quality varies – some are substantive, many are thin. Almost always generic across hospitality types rather than bar-specific.
SBA and some state economic development agencies provide free business plan templates. These are high-quality for general business planning but generic across industries. Require significant customization for bar-specific content.
Various open-source or shared templates from business planning communities. Quality varies dramatically. Verify any specific template against the 10 required sections above.
The Bar Business Plan product on this site is the complete, drafted, customizable bar business plan – not a blank template. All ten sections pre-drafted with bar-specific content, industry-standard financial assumptions pre-populated, and customization points clearly marked for your specific venue.
For founders who want the destination without starting from a blank document: the Bar Business Plan product. For founders who want to build from scratch: use the framework on this page and the guidance on the Bar Business Plan Guide pillar.
Bar Business Plan Guide pillar →what goes into each section
Bar and Grill Business Plan →food service variant
Business Plan for Bar Investors →investor-focused treatment
Bar Business Plan (product) →complete plan document
Open a Bar Founder Bundle →plan plus spreadsheet, checklist, and training manual
Ryan Dahlstrom
Author & Expert Witness
20+ years of hospitality operations. Author of The Ultimate Responsible Alcohol Service Manual and The Bar Starts Here.
12 Month Financial Summary
A one-page editable outline of the four-phase framework. Adapt it for your venue.
The Bar Business Plan is the planning side of 20+ years of bar operating experience — structured to the questions lenders, investors, and landlords actually ask.